Christian apology by a non-Christian

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Gustav Bjornstrand
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Re: Christian apology by a non-Christian

Post by Gustav Bjornstrand »

Felasco wrote:I'm only pointing to the obvious, that thousands of years of theology in every corner of the world has not accomplished some key goals of religion, like uniting humanity and bringing peace etc.
I admit that, often, I have a rather pessimistic view of the present. But one must admit that in many ways, and likely for 'us', that we enjoy a 'successful' present. In the sense that our cities are well-stocked, administered quite well; our social relationships (wife, kids, neighbors) is really quite good. This present offers I think one can honestly say incomparable opportunities if one knows how to seize them. So, when you say that 'the world' has not accomplished 'some key goals of religion' (a rather general way to put it), I feel I could very honestly take issue with you. If I were to accept (and I am not sure I do, frankly) that the 'goal' of religion is to be able to enjoy the present freely, then 'religion' has done a spectacular job. Western culture in this strict sense has achieved something undreamed of. But only if that is your 'desired outcome'. It seems to me that one thing we need to do is gain some historical awareness and to understand just how ideal the present is.

Now, what you did not offer any commentary on is those lists of 'responsible entities' for the highest number of mass ['industrial-scale'] killings, and which is one of your high preoccupations. Don't you find it interesting that most of them represent *deviations* from the 'civilized model'? It seems wise to be able to distinguish.
My point is not that women are good and men are evil, but rather that nobody in history has learned how to control violent men, and we might face up to that.
However, that IS a real and very powerful narrative that floats around out there. Wise to understand it and know something about it.

But I do not have exactly the same predicate as you. I rather think that man's aggression (different from violence, but not unrelated) needs to be channelled better. I do not think it can be 'done away with', and I am not at all sure that it should. Rather, I think it needs to be directed toward higher things.
Yes, I confess to this predicate.
If it is your predicate, and if you accept the results from the list I submitted to you, then you would I think have a more or less specific area to focus in: certain concentrations of power in certain state systems and the ideologies they get invested in.

And what countervailing ideology would you propose, or might one propose, to counter the destructive one? The arts of civilization, apparently. If that is true, then we have at hand at at our disposal an existing program with proven success. That is one of my (personal) points and why I come out in favor of the Western traditions generally. But all that I have already tried to express.
Not reengineered. Retired from the scene. But I suppose that's another thread. My purpose for now is only to show that if we were to proceed, your simplistic characterizations would be shown to be lazy.
I don't know what 'retired from the scene' would mean. So I can't understand the following sentences.
I don't have faith in this "new and improved" ideology building process for the reasons I've been trying to share, it's been done over and over and over for centuries, and doesn't seem to be leading anywhere. To me, the problem is not with this or that ideology, but arises from the nature of what all ideologies are made of.
Again, I am not so sure you understand or can define a goal. So I repeat again: in many ways 'we' have achieved extraordinary things, undreamed of things. Also, insofar as I have an ideology, it is not really anything so new. But one thing I do notice: most people, and many people, have almost no defined ideology. I am not making this up. They receive by osmosis certain ideas and values and attitudes but they are not really 'possessed' by their own ideology. So, again, it is not so much a question of 'new and improved' but rather return to certain Cores. I would call that Western Traditionalism or 'the Western Traditions'. It is already there. Nothing new.
Ok, I'm interested in the inside, please continue.
For me, this connects to what I just wrote, above. The 'outer world' is going at its own speed and careening toward whatever are the mass goals, however nebulous they may be. This leaves the 'inner world' which can be philosophic, cerebral, literary, spiritual, meditative, and all such things.
Ok, I don't care whether we call it PC or not, so you can have this one. Whether my views are PC or not, how about meeting the arguments instead of merely characterizing them?
But the definition 'politically correct' is not just a vain abusive term. It refers to a real thing. There are certain clusters of ideas that are 'floating around' out there and they have high ideological content. Many of them cluster around gender issues, femininity and feminism, masculinity, violence, 'democracy'. The list goes on. It is not that I wish just to brand you or anyone with a label. I wish to use terms like that fairly. I personally think that all that is politically correct needs to be…deconstructed. But here is an unlikely example: It is in fact, nowadays, 'politically incorrect' to defend and apologize Christianity. As with many on this forum the most 'reasonable' thing is to do what everyone else does: smash it, hate it, tear it to shreds. Vilify it. To participate in that [in my view stupid] project would be an example of flowing with the 'politically correct'. For me this extends to many other things. Gender is one. Cultural valuations another. Once one steps out of PC Formulations, once one has done it just once, one can repeat it in any other camp.
Which is more important to you, the religious inquiry, or the process of philosophy?
What is most important for me personally is to unravel the many knots that have been tied within me, and to be able to see as unconstrainedly as I can. I have said that the present is a 'lying present' and it is very difficult to approach 'truth'. That is the very core and essence of my own struggle and also interest.

I think that once one has some sort of 'grip' on things generally that one is duty-bound to live one's values and to share those values with the people around one. This is where the rubber hits the road. A man's 'religion' is the way he choses to be in and exist in his world. I have come to understand that were I to speak of a 'conversion process' (say to the tenets of Christianity or merely to living authentically, purely, dedicatedly) that a man's whole life is his 'conversion process'. One has 'conversion experiences' and then you have your whole life to put it into action. To convince yourself. To install it in yourself at a deep level. I do have the feeling that one receives 'metaphysical help' as one moves along the roads of life. Maybe the Earth is just a giant training ground?

If there is continuity between one life lived and another (it would be nice if there were other lives to live especially if one could take *essences* with one, if not the specific personality), then a man's life could be a process of learning how to serve higher purposes within the material realm. And that would bring me back to a conversation about the very high essences that exist in our own culture. It is really already there. It is a question of seeing it and recognizing it.

Finally, I don't know how to respond to what you say about 'uniting humanity'. I am deeply suspicious of this. First, you'd have to have defined what sort of 'ground' you are speaking of. Coke commercials in theory can 'unite' people as can We Are The World-type emotionalism. I am indeed interested in the uniting power of the Church in Europe which is now largely dissolved. It is an area of study that is very rich indeed (except if you utterly 'hate' Christianity, etc., etc., etc.)
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Re: Christian apology by a non-Christian

Post by Felasco »

Hi again Gustav,
What is most important for me personally is to unravel the many knots that have been tied within me, and to be able to see as unconstrainedly as I can. I have said that the present is a 'lying present' and it is very difficult to approach 'truth'. That is the very core and essence of my own struggle and also interest.
1) What are the knots you refer to made of?

2) What is truth? Is truth a concept in our head that accurately represents reality? Is truth a symbol? Or is truth the real thing the symbol points to?

Which is more true? A photograph of Gustav, or the guy reading this post?
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Gustav Bjornstrand
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Re: Christian apology by a non-Christian

Post by Gustav Bjornstrand »

The essence is expressed here:
  • Grace to you and peace from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ.

    Spiritual Blessings in Christ

    Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who has blessed us in Christ with every spiritual blessing in the heavenly places, just as he chose us in Christ before the foundation of the world to be holy and blameless before him in love. He destined us for adoption as his children through Jesus Christ, according to the good pleasure of his will, to the praise of his glorious grace that he freely bestowed on us in the Beloved. In him we have redemption through his blood, the forgiveness of our trespasses, according to the riches of his grace that he lavished on us. With all wisdom and insight he has made known to us the mystery of his will, according to his good pleasure that he set forth in Christ, as a plan for the fullness of time, to gather up all things in him, things in heaven and things on earth. In Christ we have also obtained an inheritance, having been destined according to the purpose of him who accomplishes all things according to his counsel and will, so that we, who were the first to set our hope on Christ, might live for the praise of his glory. In him you also, when you had heard the word of truth, the gospel of your salvation, and had believed in him, were marked with the seal of the promised Holy Spirit; this is the pledge of our inheritance towards redemption as God’s own people, to the praise of his glory.

    ---Ephesians 1:2-14
Emmanuel Can in the 'Calvin on the Sensus Divinitatis' thread wrote:Well, this is a common misunderstanding of the Christian position, at least. Christians do not claim that there is any action-based way to achieve relationship with God. Christians do not claim to be "good" people; in fact, they insist they are actually quite bad, and in some cases, no better than the lowest run of humanity. But they claim they have abandoned hope of every achieving such relationship, and in desperate self-abandonment have called out to God to do for them what they are powerless to do for themselves.

The Christian understanding of the prerequisite to relationship to God is called "holiness," a condition of total "setting apart" to sacred use of the self. That requires perfection, and perfection is a property simply unattainable to human beings. It takes the salvific (i.e. saving) work of God Himself.
I would locate in this on of the prime reasons why Christianity is now falling into decadence and degeneration, and why, due to the very nature of the problems of such a view, that it was destined to become degenerate. Once you have separated a man's activity from some 'inner orientation', and also the 'inner conversion experience' from a possibility of living it authentically in his world, you have essentially divided that man and rendered him ineffective in his 'real world'. It is a form of emasculation!

The only way for him to be effective is to bend the rules, or to engage in deviant behavior, since he is not really 'allowed' to be in and to function in the world. I think that the reasons for degeneration, though complex indeed, do stem from the primary 'contempt for the world' that shines out so clearly in the early Christian attitude. At a basic level it is a hatred of the physical platform. But also a contempt for and hatred of 'Rome'. And of course a very potent self-hatred. As a result, there is a strong escapist psychological and ethical element that functions at a fundamental level in Christian thinking.

Christians therefor need to re-conceive this very core attitude it seems to me. Also, the notion or the sentiment---always quite a bit melodramatic---that men are 'through-and-through evil' (an absolute state of 'total depravity') is emasculating to a man at a very basic level, as in:
  • All we like sheep have gone astray;
    we have all turned to our own way,
    and the Lord has laid on him
    the iniquity of us all.

    ---Isaiah 53:6

    Indeed, I was born guilty,
    a sinner when my mother conceived me.

    ---Psalm 51:5

    You were dead through the trespasses and sins in which you once lived, following the course of this world, following the ruler of the power of the air, the spirit that is now at work among those who are disobedient. All of us once lived among them in the passions of our flesh, following the desires of flesh and senses, and we were by nature children of wrath, like everyone else.

    ---Ephesians 2:1-3

    Jesus answered him, ‘Very truly, I tell you, no one can see the kingdom of God without being born from above'.

    ---John 3:3

    You are from your father the devil, and you choose to do your father’s desires. He was a murderer from the beginning and does not stand in the truth, because there is no truth in him. When he lies, he speaks according to his own nature, for he is a liar and the father of lies.

    ---John 8:44

    The heart is devious above all else;
    it is perverse—
    who can understand it?

    ---Jeremiah 17:9
The core doctrines of Evangelical Christianity hinge in these tenets: Total Depravity, Unconditional Election, Limited Atonement, Irresistible Grace, and 'Preservation of the Saints', as in:
  • Who will separate us from the love of Christ? Will hardship, or distress, or persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or peril, or sword? As it is written:

    ‘For your sake we are being killed all day long;
    we are accounted as sheep to be slaughtered.’

    No, in all these things we are more than conquerors through him who loved us. For I am convinced that neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor rulers, nor things present, nor things to come, nor powers, nor height, nor depth, nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord.

    ---Romans 8:35-39
Although I feel that I understand the mood here, and if the mood is modified a bit it can make sense to me, I cannot help but to understand that this form of Christianity is for the 'absolute renunciant', and that if you really and truly internalized these conceptions (for to actually live in the world will mean that you have to lie to yourself! which also seems to turn [some] Christians automatically into hypocrites!) you cannot function in this realm, not really.

I begin to understand that there is a basic reason why people resist the essences in these formulations: because it you really do internalize them (and in truth Christians do not do this fully), you literally become divided against yourself, and divided against your world. It seems to me that, either consciously or unconsciously, some people at least have concluded that this self-division (psychologically? ethically? spiritually?) just doesn't work. So, what is needed is a reconsideration of man's basic orientation in relation to what lies 'beyond the human dimension'. It seems to me that one is forced to rephrase the basic tenets of Christianity and to establish ways and means for people to live fully within the world, within their bodies in the world, and to be able to live, create and to prosper within the earthly domain. If it cannot do that, if it cannot allow for that shift, it will functionally disappear.

One needs to wipe everything from off the table and then carefully go back through all the different formulations, and then rededicate oneself to understanding a 'primordeal spirituality' which preceded the specific Christian form.

My understanding, perhaps incorrect, of both Immanuel Can and Harry '2.2.1' Baird is that, though their descriptive lingo differs, at some level they conceive of and live in a quite similar world. The God of IC is 'absolutely good' which functionally negates every aspect of reality as it is known and knowable. One indeed has the inner relationship to that absolutely good God and all the promises that God offers. But there is no way to have a tangible and 'holy' relationship with 'the world' itself, nor our being in that world. There would be no way to construct a Holy World as the world is shot through with all that the absolutely good God is not: and hence the world is really the Dark Prince's Kingdom.

Harry is in functionally the same boat. He literally cannot see 'God' as having a relationship to the 'horrors' that operate fundamentally in this world. You have to really accentuate this to understand it. The biological world is based on predation and at the most essential level any and every biological entity, in order to live, must 'violate the rights' of some other entity in order to live and prosper. This is intolerable to Harry. It produces in him a very real and very fundamental anxiety. Indeed he is forced to turn against his own self! What a horrible sort of reality to live in! The entity must turn against itself and negate itself! This is wickedly dysfunctional it seems to me.

So, the manouevre that Harry is forced to carry out is one where 'God' is allowed to be truly and wholly 'good' and consequently nearly completely, or even completely, absent from this world! But certainly from within Harry himself. He is 'abandoned' in this devil-world by a God who has little or no potency. He is literally in the hands of demons who do with him what they will. What a horrible and painful world to live in!

Oddly enough---though I could be pushing the metaphor somewhat---his untenable and painful condition is really the condition of so many now. It functions as a symbolization of an inner orientation and one where the being is functionally lost. What does a man do when he has been abandoned in a dark world? and has no helper or 'angel' or guide to recover a sense of homecoming?

Like it or not, accept it or not, 'religion' is about How a man orders himself in relation to existence and his own existence. If a man is 'captured' by concepts that twist him up to such a degree and places such stresses on him that he cannot live, not really, I think this means that one is forced to go back and examine the base predicates. Where did they come from? Who insists on them? What happens when they are modified? What happens when they are refashioned?
______________________________________
  • All things came into being through him, and without him not one thing came into being. What has come into being in him was life, and the life was the light of all people.

    ---John 1:3-4
Felasco
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Re: Christian apology by a non-Christian

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Like it or not, accept it or not, 'religion' is about How a man orders himself in relation to existence and his own existence.
Ok, fair enough.
If a man is 'captured' by concepts that twist him up to such a degree and places such stresses on him that he cannot live, not really, I think this means that one is forced to go back and examine the base predicates.
What are the stresses made of?
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Gustav Bjornstrand
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Re: Christian apology by a non-Christian

Post by Gustav Bjornstrand »

Felasco, Noble Warrior, you are looking for a way to repeat those elements you have already stated. I know that for you the 'problem' lies in conceptualization, any conceptualization. You have only one alternative, one route: silence.
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Re: Christian apology by a non-Christian

Post by Felasco »

When you come to an inconvenient challenge...

You blink.

First you try to bury the challenge in an avalanche of words, and if that doesn't work, you try to sweep it off the table so that you can get back to the glorious rhetoric routine. You're dodging and weaving my friend...
If a man is 'captured' by concepts that twist him up to such a degree and places such stresses on him that he cannot live, not really, I think this means that one is forced to go back and examine the base predicates.


Ok, some man is getting stress from some concepts, the human condition, a worthy target for a religious inquiry.

You propose as a solution finding new and better concepts, a process which has been repeated an endless number of times, and still stress is abundant in every direction. Five thousand years of this effort to find the correct ideology, and here we are today, on the brink of self extinction. Facts which an honest philosopher will not run from.

What you're not getting is that the stress is not a function of this or that idea, but arises from the properties of what all ideas are made of.

That's why all ideologies wind up going to war with themselves, just as Christianity has done. As soon as you get your own ideas all worked out and printed up, two hours later you and your follows will start arguing about what the proper interpretation of the Gustav Ideology really is, and your perfect ideology will become yet the latest battleground.

And it won't be because you created the wrong ideology. And you won't be able to fix it by editing and creating another version etc. That never works, because the problem is not with the content of the ideology. After all, Christianity is the ideology of peace, eh? Didn't help, did it?

The problem is not at the periphery, not at the content of thought level, but at the nature of thought level.

I know you are experienced and smart enough to get this, that's not the obstacle here. The obstacle is that you correctly perceive the threat to the "Gustav The Great Philosopher" role which you have earned over many years with great conceptual and rhetorical skill. If philosophy turns out not to be best means for this end, that role is in trouble, eh?

You need not worry. As you can see, I'm having no problem finding things to type about.
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Gustav Bjornstrand
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Re: Christian apology by a non-Christian

Post by Gustav Bjornstrand »

It is more that I am 'cutting to the chase'. I know almost exactly now where you wish to go, the sole conclusions you work with, and I won't go there. I encourage you to go there if you wish. But basically you already have. Your position is expressible in one relatively short post. After that: silence.

I am not trying to solve the problem of the world, and I might even rather like the idea of 'extinction'. I might even respect a God who tosses in His hand and takes His chances on a whole new hand.

Frankly, if I am interested in anything philosophically and religiously, it is something that would only be useful first to myself and then possibly to a small group of other people. I want to define something quite incommensurate with 'humanity'. I am not joking around with you. That is really what interests me. I am heretical, wicked and un-Christian in that sense. I actually think that 'doctrine' needs to be multi-layered and that, effectively, there is a sort of caste-system that operates in human culture. Do you see now why I identify as the Talking Snake?

Felasco, do you really think we will be able to work out a way to converse when our basic orientation is so obviously different? I think this is the third run at it and 1) you have avoided all my topics and 2) I deliberately sidestep your 'leading questions'.

What next? ;-)
Felasco wrote:The obstacle is that you correctly perceive the threat to the "Gustav The Great Philosopher" role which you have earned over many years with great conceptual and rhetorical skill. If philosophy turns out not to be best means for this end, that role is in trouble, eh?
I guess I'd have to go back to pimping myself and of course the rather predictable life of a short con artist working the South American tourist circuit. Really, I cannot see myself as a 'philosopher' since I am just not mathematical enough. Maybe I'll end up one of those bizarre specimens who 'sells' merely *clever* rhyming poems to wealthy tourists who pay him off just to get rid of him?

Hmmmm. Thanks for depressing me...
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Re: Christian apology by a non-Christian

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Felasco, do you really think we will be able to work out a way to converse when our basic orientation is so obviously different? I think this is the third run at it and 1) you have avoided all my topics and 2) I deliberately sidestep your 'leading questions'.

What next? ;-)
Ok, what's next is a good question. A useful question for all readers, which only they can answer for themselves, might be...

-------------------

1) Does the reader see philosophy as a tool with which to pursue a religious inquiry? Is philosophy the means, and the religious inquiry the end?

OR:

2) Does the reader see a religious inquiry as a means with which to pursue the experience of philosophy? Is the religious inquiry the means, and philosophy the desired end?

-------------------

What is their bottom line? Where are they trying to go? What really interests them most, the process of philosophy, or a religious inquiry?

I'm not arguing one of these is right and the other is wrong, only that the reader should be clear in themselves what their real goal is. If they aren't clear what their real goal is, they are unlikely to reach it.

If a reader answers #2, if having the experience of philosophy is their real goal, then I agree my points above are not helpful to that reader. My best guess for now is that this describes you, and so I can agree I am likely barking up the wrong tree. If true, I hope I've at least been somewhat entertaining while wasting your time. :-)

If a reader answers #1, if they are using philosophy as a means with which to pursue a religious inquiry, this is a different matter.

In this case, before the reader spends decades using philosophy as their means, they should first question whether philosophy is the appropriate tool for this particular job. This examination, this challenging of a common assumption, is itself philosophy, which is why I have plenty to type about in our exchanges.

A reader whose primary goal is that of having the experience of philosophy will understandably have little to no interest in questioning whether philosophy is the best tool for a religious inquiry. I get that, or well, I should get that. :-)

Gustav, I do apologize for sidestepping some of your topics, but you do have quite a few of them :-) and imho, none of them are leading towards a deeper religious inquiry, but rather towards a more rich and complex philosophical experience.

To each their own is probably a good next step for this thread, eh?
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Gustav Bjornstrand
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Re: Christian apology by a non-Christian

Post by Gustav Bjornstrand »

Esteemed Felasco. Your 'Number 1' implies that you have already established what is 'religious inquiry'. I sense that it connects with your anti-conceptualization/symbolism stance and your assertion that to 'get real' one has to perform a certain manoeuvre which you allude to but don't quite spell out. Therefor, you understand 'philosophical' activity as not being (really or perhaps foundationally) related to 'religious inquiry' and, largely, a waste of time (if one desired to be 'religious' according to your definitions).
What is their bottom line? Where are they trying to go? What really interests them most, the process of philosophy, or a religious inquiry?
Here, on this forum, I think it is somewhat obvious. Those who take stands against 'religious positions' (in pro of 'atheism', etc.) do so because they see themselves as serving a higher and better purpose. They understand 'religion' as having done them harm and actively doing harm in the world they conceive. Those who defend 'religion', or certain tenets of religion, bring forward arguments in favor of their own cherished views and understandings. The question What are they trying to do? (you said Where are they trying to go) is as complex as any particular person is.

Since I do not---even remotely it would seem---except your predicates and also notice that every time you speak your (unexamined?) predicates are foundationally present in what you write, I am stuck in a very basic role of reflecting your PC Formulations back at you. I could not even begin to speak to you about what I think and understand because you do not even remotely share my presuppositions. We do not have a platform for conversation!

I could only say that, and certainly in the West, there is a marriage between religious conception and philosophical expression (and clarification). One need make no other reference but than to Plato.
I'm not arguing one of these is right and the other is wrong, only that the reader should be clear in themselves what their real goal is. If they aren't clear what their real goal is, they are unlikely to reach it.
Again, you are presenting in clandestine and unrevealed form your a priori sense of just exactly what is the 'real goal'. It is clear to you (though I suggest that in fact it is actually fairly murky and you have not really thought it through) what the 'real goal' should be: Going back to some pristine pre-conscious state. Or resorting to some pre-conscptual state. Disengaging from 'philosophy' and reconnecting with 'the real' (in Nature?) And also suspending masculinity as the author of violence and industrial-level killing.
Gustav, I do apologize for sidestepping some of your topics, but you do have quite a few of them :-) and imho, none of them are leading towards a deeper religious inquiry, but rather towards a more rich and complex philosophical experience.
Don't worry even slightly. Again, it is a question of predicates and presuppositions. I (would like to believe that I) am acutely aware of my own and clear about my intentions, and so I can fairly easily respond to you. You, in fact, are less clear about your own and in this sense the conversation may have more value for you than for me.

I am not interested in 'religious inquiry' as you (vaguely) define it. I am interested in using conceptual (intellectual and language) tools to cut through mystified and mystifying mass-concepts that hulk across the intellectual, religious and existential landscape. In this sense (to say it dramatically) I am more interested in 'war' than in a murky, sentimentalist 'peace'. I am more interested in what agitates and stirs-up than in what quiets and calms down. I am interested in using ideas as a lever, which means that, yes, there is a specific will there. As a side-project I also deeply feel that Kim Kardashian should be outlawed no matter if she loses or gains 10 pounds or even 100 punds. She has a fat ass and I don't like fat asses! (This is non-negotiable).
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Gustav Bjornstrand
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Re: Christian apology by a non-Christian

Post by Gustav Bjornstrand »

Immanuel Can (on another thread) wrote:The various 'gods' speak differently, reveal themselves as characteristically different from one another, claim different forms of revelation, are associated with different prophets, have different wills and values, issue different edicts or ethics, describe different purposes, and promise different destinies. Some describe as evil what others describe as good. Some are said to hate what others love. It takes an extraordinary sort of mental gymnastics (or rather, deliberate lack of focus) to manage to perceive them as "all the same."

For a thinking person, the normal interpretation of such variance would be, "Someone really doesn't know what he/she is talking about." But when the referent is "god," a lot of people simply mentally collapse and resort to visceral, uncritical relativism. For instance, a lot of modern secular liberals manage to conflate all the 'gods' into one amorphous, characterless lump, the "universal god": big, benign, featureless and flaccid -- requiring nothing, a threat to no one, promising nothing, and equally a help to no one.

Suffice to say, this bizarre construct bears very little resemblance to anything a real religion regards as a god. It's actually pretty insulting to all the traditions, regardless of their particular 'god' view. I am constantly amazed by how this passes for "tolerance" or "openness."
There is a strange polarity: on one hand 'god' is conveniently converted into a benign old grandmother in order to get away from the other (logically necessary) 'god' that is intensely stern, completely opposed to human cupidity and capriciousness, and thoroughly intolerant of humankind's spurious 'interpretations' of human rights, freedom, acceptable human activity, etc.

To dispropose a Grandmother God is to repropose a Grandfather God, and this may indeed mean resuscitating a truly terrible and quite factually intolerant God capable of whipping the present into shape through Absolute Violence. Or simply wiping it off the map.

If we were to be very truthful we would have to put on the table that within Christian apocalypticism there exist and operate extremely strict concepts of Fate that will quite literally wipe away errant, disobedient humankind through a glorified Terror and Violence.

(Naturally, this implies a certain, say, *dissatisfaction* with the way things are going…) ;-)

What this means, in relation to other ur-traditions (it would seem) is that there may quite factually exist a 'cosmic order' that is preexistent and universal (on a cosmic scale) and that all traditions at fundamental levels 'intuit' that order and attempt to establish societies that conform to that order and to that necessity. In this sense Christianity is one among numerous others and is not necessarily 'special' and cannot decide the issue. In fact it is also possible that Christianity is a partial vision, or an afflicted vision, or even a flawed vision, that might itself need to 'return' to elements that could be described as 'more original'. This is implied I think in the Gospel of John (eternal religious principals).

I would suggest that in these senses the religious philosophy of of the Vedas (for example), in the form of Satyarth Prakash (and other revisionist texts from that late 1800's period during the Hindu revival movement) (text here) are able to go straight to the core of the 'meaning of religion' in culture generally. It is a radical and utterly impracticable vision and goes utterly against the grain of modernity. But so in fact (in implication) goes Evangelical Christianity which envisions a time when God himself with completely remodel the Earth through acts of inconceivable violence.

In actual fact Evangelical Christianity can only, and seeks only to, prepare a soul for radical separation from the Earth. In contradistinction, the Vedic vision was one of orientation within the material platform and the construction of a Holy Civilization.

Additionally: One of the reasons why the Christian God, the God of the West, has become a 'grandmotherly God' is because in some senses Christianity itself has reinterpreted God and turned Him into the 'God of Love'. That will open you up to all sorts of slippery slopes. So, it is in fact Christians who share some of the fault of creating this benign impotency.

What is curious in all this is how the idea of God evolves and people actually remodel their concepts as they go along. The way John paints it, it is as if the God of the Jews is somehow a different God, in fact not God but the Devil himself! How that one is pulled off is anyone's guess. How easy then to create and apply any sort of re-characterization that one desires and then, naturally, go to work to support it with Biblical references. It has often seemed to me that the essential Christian God is found and described to a 'tee' in the Psalms. Every important element of Christianity is found there and one could almost do without the Gospel accounts if one had the Psalms! But the Psalms are quintessentially Jewish.
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Gustav Bjornstrand
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Re: Christian apology by a non-Christian

Post by Gustav Bjornstrand »

A couple of quick notes in respect this post and the response to it. [BTW, shall we privilege a 'mellow theology' of tipsy Dionysianism or shall we seek an 'acidic theology' of rigor and intensity? (Huar huar). I am of the opinion that we most certainly require an acidic theology. And yet such an acidic theology is 'only for the few' to take a Nietzschean stance.]

At the highest level, within historical religious traditionalism, the notion of god is wedded to a conception of the superpersonal and as against the fluctuating reality of man, that of the world, of the natural world certainly, and in this sense is a means of articulating and perhaps encapsulating the sense of a standard-providing 'overworld'. It is not and perhaps cannot be known tangibly, as water and fire and your fucking dick in your hand and all sensory effects are known tangibly, but is intuited at what may be 'the highest level'.

On another extreme, and outside of the possibility of such 'high intuition' and also the possibility of strict demands that one might place on oneself in relation to what is intuited, is a range of perceptions and symbolisms held in the popular and rather sensationalist mind. This 'mind' corresponds to what might be called an unstudied presence within the dynamic of the world, and it could be described as a 'superstitious' range of perceptions in regard to 'the spiritual world' which might include: spooks, ghosts, hauntings, curses, charms, goblins, and also (possibly) 'NDEs' and significantly 'possessions' and also 'exorcisms'. This is all of course very dramatic stuff and certainly draws in and captures a somewhat lower-level imagination, but I think it needs to be said that, again at the higher levels, a concept of God is really something else significantly.

To illustrate one might take the example of classic 'renunciation'. The renunciant 'renounces' a relationship to strictly material phenomena, to the shifting and unstable physical platform. It is as if he shifts the weight of dependence from a shifting world to an eternal and constant world which is understood as superpersonal and also supernatural. With this shift he anchors himself to an eternal Being that exists in contradistinction to an endless process of Becoming. This is done, obviously, on an inner level and is an inner work. It is important though to understand that it is an inner work that cannot be understood or defended-explained from a strict material perspective. Because it arises in a man when he intuits or conceives (not through material evidence) the existence of such a reality of Being. It is in essence a chosen relationship with something intangible. So, the notion of tangibility in relation to (what might be called) supreme being is now questionable. In truth it seems that all religious philosophies, and all dramatic stories such as for obvious example the Christian Gospels, are shot through with lower-level superstitionism, and a range of imagined descents of the miraculous into the material plane. So, again, possessions, ghosts, hauntings, miracles and all sorts of literally impossible events that, for a lower-level mind, are the only means he has to conceive of what is inconceivable. Because at the highest possible level if we are to propose a 'god' we really do have to push it back to (as IC says) the very 'ground of being'. It is not therefor the event or the events on the platform but the platform itself. Not what exists but existence that is the first order of (higher) conception. Then and from that one 'constructs' a conceptual model toward what is intangible but always based on or which rises out of contaminated sense perception, certainly contaminated imagination (that is ridden with imagined 'entities' that have a certain 'weight' in the imagined and imaginal world).

But none of this is what it is about, not at the higher possible levels. Yet when through a whole group of different causes a man or men in general sever their (tenuous anyway and never firmly established) link to an Ideal Reality, it is inevitable that their thinking suddenly or gradually degenerates away from a high conceived ideal (and all the moral demands such a 'world' makes on them, or they on themselves in relation to It), and they descend as it were back into a materially-driven conceptual system of strict material mechanics and contingencies. In this sense one (re)becomes an animal and the possibility of relationship with a 'higher world' (however it might be conceived) is broken. Curiously, it seems that what occurs in that situation is that (this is theoretical) the only means of 'manifestation' of a rather natural superpersonal and overworldly (hardwired?) sense and intuition in man, is through all that lower-level phenomenalism: spooks, hauntings, tappings in the walls, but always with a sort of electrical dramatism. But none of that is the point!

The point (here Gustav really kicks in to the heart of his [unappreciated!] sermon) is to orient oneself and one's life toward the highest possible conception, and what this really means (as in this sense the idea of the renunciant's path is a relational model) is to build a life in relation to higher things. And this seems to mean to willfully and voluntarily veer away from mere sensation and 'pleasure' as a goal and to DEFINE such 'higher things'. The process of definition is hard enough! Then comes to process of reorienting oneself in relation to those ideals and determining how indeed one will arrange it so one's life represents and reflects that Higher Idealism. And this---and nothing else!---is really what it is about or should be about.

The challenge: Prove to me there is a God! can never be met. First because the whole notion of 'god' is totally contaminated, and not a little bit by Christianity itself! The reduction of god to a mere personalism, as if 'god' is or even should be so 'personally concerned' for a man! No, this idea has to be severely readdressed. The Christian himself turns 'god' into a sort of Supermarket Manager where you (sincerely) place your little Stupidity Order and then go back to your seat and wait for it to be fulfilled. God as Moloch-Amazon.com with Fulfillment Centers and Follow-ups!

But how could you ever expect that 99.9% of humankind, now incarnated, could enter into the Higher Coceptions and those possibilities? When YOU yourself cannot even conceive of it! What would you say then? Eight-five percent? Who really is capable of this? And also: what renders a man incapable of Higher Conceptualization? Because it seems that you really have to ask: What countervailing concepts and what weighty imaginations keep me from coming to an understanding within myself that then leads to the process of constructing, voluntarily and heroically, a relationship to a superior notion of divinity? Or what, do you revel in becoming a disgusting masturbating almost drooling [fallen] man and chose to 'love' it? Because you can conceive of nothing else and have no other motivation? To give yourself over to the only possibility open to you, a life in materialism?
Felasco
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Re: Christian apology by a non-Christian

Post by Felasco »

I am interested in using conceptual (intellectual and language) tools to cut through mystified and mystifying mass-concepts that hulk across the intellectual, religious and existential landscape.
We are in agreement. You are using religious topics as a means to the end of having a philosophic experience, and you are succeeding in achieving your goal.
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Gustav Bjornstrand
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Re: Christian apology by a non-Christian

Post by Gustav Bjornstrand »

Even with this I differ. The process of cutting through layer after layer of gunk and BS is conceptual and philosophical. It is possible, after doing this to some degree or other, that one might then come into 'religion' or religious relationship, but a long period of 'cutting through', for us, is required. I suggest that what you seem to propose (without ever quite revealing it) is just abandoning altogether the conceptual field and certainly you seem to have no recognition of the necessity of 'conceptual battle'. I sense that you are interested in some level of mysticism and perhaps mystical experience, and what interests me is 'cleaning off the table of conceptions' in relation to a strong theological position. It is the theological position that makes a man's life strong … or weak.
Felasco
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Re: Christian apology by a non-Christian

Post by Felasco »

The process of cutting through layer after layer of gunk and BS is conceptual and philosophical.
It is for you, because you want it to be conceptual and philosophical, which is of course your right.

Again, I propose your real goal is not to "cut through layer after layer of gunk and BS" because it is much more efficient to do that by turning off that which all gunk and BS are made of.

Your real goal is the experience of elaborate conceptual philosophical complexness, a goal which you are reaching in an impressive manner.

Again, we might ask readers this question...

HYPOTHETICAL: If compelling evidence was developed that playing basketball was the ideal way to pursue a religious inquiry (however one might define that) what would the reader do next?

1) Would the reader leave the philosophy books and forums behind and lace up their sneakers?

2) Or would the reader set the compelling evidence aside, ignore the basketball court, and keep on philosophizing?

The answer to this question reveals what the reader's real goal is.
It is possible, after doing this to some degree or other, that one might then come into 'religion' or religious relationship, but a long period of 'cutting through', for us, is required.
No, it's not.

It may be required for you personally, but it is not required in the universal global sense your statement seems to imply.

Lots and lots and lots of people who aren't analytical nerds like you and me have deep religious experiences without any need for cutting through mountains of conceptualizations etc. This is a simple fact that I'm sure you're aware of.
I suggest that what you seem to propose (without ever quite revealing it) is just abandoning altogether the conceptual field and certainly you seem to have no recognition of the necessity of 'conceptual battle'.
I find the conceptual field useful for discovering the bankruptcy of the conceptual field (ie. theology), in relation to the topics we're discussing here.

Let's use the example of Christianity, a religion we both in part respect, while not being members ourselves.

We can replace our mountains of fancy philosophical talk with a single word, love. Each day of our lives presents a hundred opportunities to choose between a focus on ourselves or somebody else. That's a lifelong religious inquiry project every bit as valid as philosophy, and arguably far more serious and useful.
It is the theological position that makes a man's life strong … or weak.
You keeping confusing the local with the global, Gustav's situation with the situation of all mankind.
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Gustav Bjornstrand
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Re: Christian apology by a non-Christian

Post by Gustav Bjornstrand »

Felasco wrote:Lots and lots and lots of people who aren't analytical nerds like you and me have deep religious experiences without any need for cutting through mountains of conceptualizations etc. This is a simple fact that I'm sure you're aware of.
Again and time and again we keep hitting these core points where we don't share agreement. I am willing to say that man has varying ways of experiencing divinity, or experiences that seem manifestations of Reality (visions of the eternal, prophetic epiphany, etc.), and certainly differing ways that the Experience is translated into activity, doing, theology, and construction within the plane of existence. But the basic activity---summed up imprecisely as 'analysis' [as in 'analytical nerds'] is a universal and---in my view---the most important activity of man. And its masculine nature I would emphasize. If for you this is the 'activity of a nerd' (which is to say a defect really) then I am here to tell you that you are denigrating the single more important and most relevant activity and possibility of man. Everything that can be conceived of as 'valuable' is found in that activity and in what results from it. That is quite likely where a fundamental and unbridgeable difference is to be found between our viewpoints.

A 'religious experience', without a means to translate it into concepts that can be used and which can take shape in this world and mould this world, toward good or toward evil, has very little value indeed. We encounter here another core difference: (It seems to me that) you have valuated, without really thinking it through, some vague something you call 'religious experience'. What is the importance of it? What makes you so sure? In my case, I am not sure. Also, I devaluate mere experience. There are indeed experiences that might lead a man to all sorts of choices, but the experience itself does not do that.
Again, I propose your real goal is not to "cut through layer after layer of gunk and BS" because it is much more efficient to do that by turning off that which all gunk and BS are made of.
Well, perhaps, and yet this is more about some odd predicate you have established but without substantiation. I am not convinced. Additionally, I have noted how 'philosophies' of this sort share commonality in vagueness and impotency. They have emotional appeal though, I will grant you that. My impression is that you have established some Experience as being of core importance, so naturally your valuation of it exceeds what you understand mine to be. This is not mere semantics. To have validity, for me, this experience has to translate into a concrete modus. I accept that it may not be so, for you.

Your hypothetical is really a form of fallacious argumentation in operation. You assume that you know and can talk about what 'religion' is or should be. I suggest that you have a vague and perhaps imperfectly intuited sense of it, that it is anti-conceptual and (likely) rather feminine, not as a term of contempt but as an accurate description. I suggest that a stronger position is to understand Experience as possible, but as both relevant and irrelevant all depending on what a person DOES with it. And it is in doing that the difference is known.
The answer to this question reveals what the reader's real goal is.
More properly 'the answer' to your rhetorical set-up!
We can replace our mountains of fancy philosophical talk with a single word, love. Each day of our lives presents a hundred opportunities to choose between a focus on ourselves or somebody else. That's a lifelong religious inquiry project every bit as valid as philosophy, and arguably far more serious and useful.
What this shows me is how deeply you are mystified and how your mystification has trapped you. I simply DO NOT ACCEPT your predicate! To describe god as 'love' and to the revelation of god a s a revelation of 'love' is part of the problem of a badly conceived theology. In the sense that you seem to define it (nebulously and femininely) I would choose to have no part of this 'love'. This 'love' becomes part of a kind of con-game. It is an easy route to a (false) universalism. Myself, I would establish order, definition, discipline and duty before this nebulous 'love'.

So again: differences in predicates that will not be bridged. Fundamental differences. And so it is...
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